Home > Time Editor Thrills Over Obama Performance, Compares it to the Beatles

Time Editor Thrills Over Obama Performance, Compares it to the Beatles

By

Scott Whitlock

May 3, 2010 - 5:16pm

The hosts and guests of a special Sunday edition of Morning Joe fawned over
Barack Obama's May 1 performance at the White House Correspondence Dinner. Time
managing editor Richard Stengel appeared and knocked host Jay Leno by
comparison: "I think that's one of the things that undermined Jay's routine
is that it's like coming after the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show."

Stengel highlighted an off-putting moment from the 2009
dinner[1] when the President joked to the assembled journalists: "Most of you
covered me; all of you voted for me." He described this as a "sour note" and
admitted, "And there was kind of an awkward laughter because no one wants to
reckon with that. I mean, we're in an adversarial relationship, but a respectful
relationship."

Scarborough also hyped Obama's performance, praising, "The President so
easily outperformed Jay Leno, it wasn't even close. It was like Secretariat
against my 17-year-old dog..."

The Morning Joe host seemed to have a different interpretation than that of
the Washington Post. Scarborough extolled, "And he actually started...with
something that works, self-deprecation from a guy who gets knocked around by
people in this room as being arrogant, aloof."

Paul
Farhi[2] of the Post disagreed, finding little self-deprecation in the routine:

Breaking with presidential punch line tradition for the second consecutive
year, Obama dropped zinger after zinger on his opponents and allies alike at the
annual White House Correspondents' Association dinner. Obama went all Don
Rickles on a broad range of topics and individuals: Vice President Biden and
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, presidential advisers David Axelrod and Rahm
Emanuel, the news media, Jay Leno, and Republicans Michael Steele, Scott Brown,
John McCain and Sarah Palin.

Except for a mild joke pegged to his falling approval ratings, Obama mostly
spared Obama during his 14-minute stand-up routine.

[Emphasis added.] A partial transcript of the May 2 segment follows:

JOE SCARBOROUGH: The President, listen, can we just- I know it's an NBC-owned
entity, this MSNBC thing we talk about, but can we just say it? The President so
easily outperformed Jay Leno, it wasn't even close. It was like Secretariat
against my 17-year-old dog, Willie.

8:07

SCARBOROUGH: I'm telling you, he was very good. And he actually started, I
thought, Jon, with something that works, self-deprecation from a guy who gets
knocked around by people in this room as being arrogant, aloof. And he just went
right after, talking about his ratings, everything else. I really thought
that was one of the funnier performances I've seen a president perform.

8:39

RICHARD STENGEL: I'm not a historian of the White House Correspondents'
Dinner, although I've been here way too many times, I don't think the President
has ever preceded the comedic act before.

MIKA BRZEZINSKI: That was a shame.

STENGEL: I think that was the first time that ever happened and it was a very
smart thing to do. Remember, he came after Wanda Sykes last year. And, again,
you don't want to be after the President. I think that's one of the things
that undermined Jay's routine is that it's like coming after the Beatles on the
Ed Sullivan Show.

JOE SCARBOROUGH: And you're the juggler after, yeah, the Beatles. And of
course what a funny joke last night, the president talking about why he wanted
to be before Jay because if you're after the time slot, it's always very
dangerous.

...

SCARBOROUGH: You brought up a great point off camera about the President
being self-deprecating. I thought, again, for a guy who is playing against type
who is always accused of being aloof and smug by people in the room, he did
something different this year than he did last year.

STENGEL: Yes. Yes. Because, remember last year- and it hit a little bit of
a sour note in the room- where he said, "You know, I know you all loved me. I
know you all voted for me." And there was kind of an awkward laughter because no
one wants to reckon with that. I mean, we're in an adversarial relationship, but
a respectful relationship. This year I thought he was much more
self-deprecating. He talked about the highs and lows constantly. I mean, he
would sometimes make fun of the lows and sometimes make fun of the highs. I
mean, he was a little penitent. He'd been- It's like he had his comeuppance.

-Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here[3] to follow him on
Twitter.

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